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The Red Cloud Chief from Red Cloud, Nebraska • Page 7

Location:
Red Cloud, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

mw T- "T'Sf 1 I it a Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it How To Find Out. Fill bottle or common glass with your water mid let it stand twenty-four hours I fH nseclimentorsct- W2ilJ E-r-pCZ tlingindiealcsuii tUU- ditioii of the kid neys; if it stains your linen it is evidence of kidney trouble too frequent desire to pass it or pain in the back is nlso convincing proof Hint the kidneys and bladder tire out of order. What To Do. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Hoot, the great kidney remedy, fulfills every wiah in curing rheumatism, pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary oassage.

It corrects inability to hold wuter mid scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of licmor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often during the dtiv, and to get up many times (hiring the night. The mild null the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by druggists in fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes.

You may have a sample bottle and a nook that tells all it ikhu notn sent I ree iri.w,: i t.i.i- ii. favriiiiaii Kilmer liing-3 hainton, N. Y. When rtomoot swnmivnoot, writing mention this paper and don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, ISiughauitou, N.

Y. In a watch chain that adds nothing to the chain's looks or the quality of its workmanship The outer surface of pure gold and all the details of workmanship and finish are identically the same in Watch Chains and in the costly gold ones. For Sale by Newhouse Jewelers opticians, Red Cloudy Nebraska a7ezsK3SOTCErs jt sfoFi5Rsff! Gcod Pesple I'm glad to be interviewed on the subject of Alcoholism, its treatment by Rational Remedy and my own happy experience as a result of that treatment. Consultation ftee. Call on or write me for for full particulars.

Rldgway Leggetti RED CLOUD, NEB. Chas. L. Winfrey The Auctioneer, RED CL 'UD, NEB. Will cry your sales and guarantee satisfaction or no pay.

I know the value of ycur stock and your interest. Stock and farm sales a specialty. Will attend sales on short notice, and make the price reasonable. I pay all telephone expenses. INSURANCE against Fire, Lightning, Cyclones nncl Windstorms, see JNO.

STANSER, agent for tho Farmers Union Insur? nnco Lincoln, tho best insurance company iu tho s'-'jto. JT YSr- Jl fcw CV ol 2ftDEN GOLD Simmo NEWS OF NEBRASKA, Fatal Hunting Accident. Bentrlcc. March 6. Hay Mlnkler.

on of D. Mlnkler, died from the effects; of an accident while hunting-He was attempting to place his shotgun In the back of the bupgy when the weapon was accidentally tils-charged. Passes the Century Mark. Rushvtllo. Nob, March 2.

The death or Mrs Anna Hammond, a distinguished member of the Daughters of the Revolution wns brought home to out people by the most impressive funeral ever held In Ilushville She died Sunday Mrs. Hammond would have 'nined her luiih year on March 23 Conversions Cost $6 66 Each. Omaha. March 4. Pastors report that the expenses of the religious re-vivnl in "he north side district lor four week; were $2jo.

which makes the cost of each conversion IfJ.fiG. Ministers also repor' that two-thirds of their congregations consisted of women nr.d that there wete few young men among them. One Prisoner Given a Pardon. Lincoln, March Governor Mickey commuted the sentence- of FranTi Henry, to take effect March 15. Henry was sentenced to the pen Tertiary for 6ix years from An'rlopo county for robbery and ho has served about one year.

The man is dying of consump. tion and it was upon th-3 recommendation of the prison physician that the commutation wns made. Flxe3 Line of Two States. Washington, March 7. The supreme court entered final decree by stipulation of counsel in the suit or Missouri against Nebraska.

The decree fixes the boundary between the two states in the middle of the liver, as it was prior to avulsion of July, 1SG7. Alired Hazolett ol Nebraska and John W. Hnllibuton of Missouri nre appointed commissioners to erect monuments. Anti-Trust Legislation In Nebraska. Ltnccln.

March The house passed the anti-trust bill by a vote of 72 to 10. It has still to be considered by the senate. The bill exempts domestic corpoiations in its provisions, and Its author, Representative Jenkins, said while it affected all foreign public corporations, It was aimed specifically at the so-called beef trust and Standard Oil company. Publicity, by the medium of complete reports to the attorney general, and severe penalties for violation of the anti-rebate provisions, are leading features of the bill. Whittccar Is Released.

Dakota Ci'y, March After spending nine months? in the county jail and having once been convicted on the same charge, but granted a new trial by Judge Graves on miscon-due of the jury. Steve Wkittecar was given his trc-c-dom, the jury acquitting him of attempting to assault his fourteen-year-old daughter The- testimony of the plair.utf and defendant was in direct conflict ol eacli other and the jury chose to believe Whittecar instead of the girl. Whittecar. his wife and aged mother wept with joy when the verdict was announced, as a conviction meant imprisonment tor life. Methodists at Lincoln.

Lincoln. March 2. A state riilssion-ary convention, bringing together five bishops of the Methodist Episcojml church and leading workers of that denomination from over the country, ia in progress here with an overflow attendance. On the program for addresses are Bishops Andrews, Tho-burn, Joyce. Hamilton and Warren, together with Dr.

F. D. Gamewell and Dr. George Heber Jones, New York; Dr. E.

M. Randall, Chicago; Dr. C. M. Boswell, Philadelphia, and others prominent In home and foreign missionary efforts.

Evangelization of the state, nation and world was the leading thought brought out at the open-Ing meeting. T. E. Hibbert Dies Suddenly. Beatrice, March T.

E. Hlb-bert, prominently identified with Gage county politics for many years, died suddenly at his home near Adams He was taken 111 while at-tending a school entertainment. Mr. Hibbert was twice elected to ihe state legislature, being a member of the visiting board of the soldiers" home, supervisor of the census of 1900 for the Fourth congressional district and assistant superintendent of the Nebraska exhibit at the Pan-American exposition. He served in the Thirty-seventh Pennsylvania volunteers infantry and battery Second Pennsylvania veteran artillery during the civil war He was fifty-nine years of age and leaves a widow and seven children CODY "Buffalo IN HIS OWN DEFENSE.

Bill" Denies Charges Made by His Wife. Omaha, March 8. William Cody HUll snrnl tho dnv hf.hlrM locked doors In his hotel apartments In this city, defending his personal character In a deposition to he used in his sul for divorce from Mrs Cody Colonel Cody's deposition declare? Mrs Cody is ono of the richest worn en In Nebraska He says he peser.t ed her with the residence In North Platte and other propertie valued at 1200.000 home in North Platte alone worh $20,000 Colonel Cody sworn lo an emphatic denial of the charge that he had In time? past beer, frequenter of dlsor dtrl houses at For; McPht-rson. Neb. Dies After Having Teeth Pulled.

Norfolk. March 2. As a result bf having throe teeth extracted at Magnet. Silas Johnson Is dead. I Cocaine was administered and It Is believed this drug worked its wny to his heart.

Army Officer's Wife Shoots Herself. Omaha, March L. Chaud-I lor. tho wife of Lieutenant Chandler of Fort Niobrara, fatally shot" herself at tho Paxton hotel, tho bullet lodging In the loft breast near tho heart. Ill health is the cause assigned.

Brakcman Killed by Cars. Lincoln Mnich S. W. P. Thread-kell of Lincoln was run over and Instantly killed In tho Burlington jnrds by a freight train.

Threadkr-ll wns employud a a brakcman und in lng a colliding it is supposed lu caught his tout In a fiog und fell uu-dei the wheels. Accidentally Killed by Gun. Beatrice. March 7. Wllllntn Quackonbiish, son of David Quae ken-bush, was killed near his homo, eight miles northwest or Beatrice by the accidental discharge of a shotgun.

He was standing near William Pluck-rett, who had just finished leloa'ding his gun. when the weapon wns discharged, blowing the lop of his head off. Business Houses at Lynch Burn. Norfolk, March S. Fire started in the empty Nebraska hotel at Lynch at 0 a.

destroying a block of buildings completely, including tho Walters hotel, Thompeon's barber shop and Dr. Neliph's olllro. The hotel guests esrnpod Tho lire- i thought to have been the work of Incendiaries Tho loss is about $8,000, partially Insured. Fences Are to Come Down. Washington, Match S.

The fences on the public domain in Nebraska have got to come down," said United States District Attorney Baxter after an interview with Attorney General Moody. Judge Baxter received Ills instructions from the attorney general to proceed, botli civilly and criminally, against the offenders who aie violating the public land laws. No Extra Pay for President of Senate. Lincoln, March 8. State Auditor Searle has refused to honor the warrant of State.

Senutor Jennings, lor $3 a day extra pay as president of tho senate, claiming tho net providing for increased compensation Is unconstitutional. The nttorney gene nil upholds the auditor In his contention. Attorney General Brown received from W. H. Harrison, president of the senate at the session two years ago, a check for $219, the amount paid him.

which he asks to be returned to the state. Lucaa on Trial for Life. Holdrege. March 7. The trial of John R.

Lucas, who shot Clyde Lester last December, Is in progress here The story brought out by tho testimony was that Lester on the morning of Dec. came across the field from a neighbor's, whore he had been staying, to the Lucas, place. Lucas ordered Lester to halt while he was still in the field, but he came on In spite of the warning and while in the roadway Lucas fired and Lester foil fnrwnrrl. 1-pRtnr wns unarmed and had done nothing except to walk toward Lucas. Tho state roBted and the defense Introduced Its testimony.

The shooting was admitted, but It wns claimed it was done in self defense. Several witnesses told of conversations with Lester In which Les ter made threats against Lucas on account of the failure to pay wages which Lucas owed Lester for work. CATTLE THIEVES ON TRIAL. Case Turns State's Evidence Against Titterlngton at North Platte. North Platte, Match S.

The district court has been In session for week trying the famous tattle rustling cases. The first case to come up wbb that of Del TItterington, who was Jointly charged with Lee Case of stealing cattle belonging to one Jones. These defendants were engaged In the butcher business together at Sutherland, and the manner of the a'rrestE and the' various escapes of Lee Cast- have been told some time ago. The trial of Del Titterlngton occupied nearly all of Ihe wee-k, and Us chief sensation was Lee Case pleading guilty to cattle stealing and then turning state's evidence against Tltteilngton. Case tes tified as to how thoy had together stolen tho cattle and butchered them Evidence, more or less cenmcunji was given to the jury, tho defendant himself taking the stand and denying that ho was In the neighborhood when the crime was committed.

After being out one nignt and one day the Jury was discharged because. It could not agree The case of the state against Market- also charged with stealing cattle, 'aktn up while the Jury it out In the Tltterlngton case and titer the submission of evidence and the by counsel tho case was given to the Jury who likewise tad a The Jury was because could not agree, And r.w trial w.ll probably be had. The cac of 'he state against Del on Ir.formntion of George Bei.tky ri.ttrclnt: conversion of entile by bailer-, hfic he en begun This lc M.oth'-r on? of the- several tcallng cases bruipht r.eainst Tittenngton If th! rr.ir iocs not win the former h': 'r'-nl The ffit'Ic case against Thiii- Bi.rbtr Las not yet been tried Uencr.ii belief at Russian Capital That Retreat Has Begun. St. Petersburg, March S.

That the bnttlo or Mukden will go down In history with Lino Yang in the long list of Husslnti defeats Is tho almost mil-vorsnl bollof In pessimistic SI. Peters-burg, which has forgotten the moaning of the word victory. The war office does not admit that tho Issues of tho great battle, which already exceeds in inagnlUide of operations and losses that of Shakhe, has been decided, although It Is positively said in high quarters that Kouiopntkln ban telegraphed to lOmpcror Nicholas that it will be Impossible to hold Mukden and that the withdrawal of tho army northward bus already been begun. Advices to SI. Petersburg newspa- I pers and dispatches to tho Associated Press Indicated thai the position of the Russian army aftc a day of furl- ous und unprecedented fighting Is desperate, but not absolutely hopeless.

Everything piobably now depends on General Kouropatkln's reserves. While the Japanese hurled thorn-solves forward at every point, their main oneirics wore behind the blow west and southwest In an attempt to envelope the Russian right and drive a wedge thnnmh tho lino at Mndzyn-ptt, but General Kouropatklii seems to have boon able successfully to shnugu front on the line of his shattered right, aligning from northwest to southeast, to protect the railroad to Mukden, and It was reported ho was practically holding all his positions. At the same time he was drawing in and shortening his line to the fc'OlltllOU'jt. According to reports all tho concentrated attacks of the Japanese to tho westward failed, and tho effort of Generals Nogt mid Oku to push the encircling movement north and eastward across General Koiironntkln's lino of communications was blocked. Reports, however, aro conllietlng.

Ono correspondent telegraphs or hearing firing to the northward, toward Tie pass, which may bo between Cossack's and Hying column of Japanese. General Kouropatklii has boon confining his strategy, as nt Lino Yang, to meeting the attneks of the Japanese mil accepting battle at places chosen by Field Marshal Oyanm. Both sides are terribly exhausted by ten clays of continuous fighting, and all tho correspondents nt tho front intimate that the issue must be definitely decided today. At the military clubs hero General Kouropatklii Is already regarded as beaten, the only question being his ability to execute a retreat. Those who believe there is still a chance Df actual Russian victory arc few and far between.

Tho majority regard tho fighting as in reality a rear guard action. Politically the result may determine the question of continued prosecution of the war. An overwhelming disas- will surely brinp nussin to terms. In its bearing on the Interior situation the result of tho battle Is regarded equally Important SUIT AGAINST SANTA FE ROAD. TaUng of Testimony In First of Kan aas Oil Conspiracy Cases Begins, I Topeka, March 8.

C. C. Cole man, the attorney general, and Frank B. Monott, the attorney for the state oil producers, began taking testimony hero in tho case brought against the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fo Railroad company in Chautauqua county. Tho action against the railroad company is based upon the charge that it Is violating the state anti-trust law.

Very little progress was made. Cyrus Anderson, secretary of the state board of railway commissioners, the first witness called, was required to furnish copies of the annual reports made last year by all of tho Kansas railroads to the board of commissioners. Reunion of Rough Riders Postponed. Washington, March 8. It was announced that tho reunion or the rough riders, President Roosevelt's old regiment, which had been scheduled to take place at Han Antonio, Tox on the 3lBt had boon postponed tin- til April 7 on the request of tho prosl aeni.

The Chief ervd the Weekly State Journal one I year for INFLAMMATORY IIIIKUIATI.S.M Cl'RKU IN DAYS Morton L. Hill, of Lebanon Miys "My wlfu luul InllHiiuniilorv Itliciiiuntlfin In every miKcli! mill Joint, licr MilWrliiK whh Icrrllile ninl liur body Mini furii wcru kwoIIcii ulmoslba-yoml rccoKnliloii; luul been In bed six week mid lintl i-lKlit ibilclniix, lint rtct'lvt'il no benefit until flic trle-d Die Mytl; euro for Rliuiitmttlxm. It k'avo Immediate relief nml hbu wns iiblu to walk iibont In three lnyn. 1 nm Hiiro II Hiiwd her life." Sold by II. Ii, Clrlec.

DrtiKKlfcl. Red Cloud. AMERICA'S GREATEST WEEKLY Tin-: Toledo Blade AND The Chief -FOit- $1.25 PER. YEAR. The Toledo Blade is the best known newspaper in the United States.

Circulation 171,000. Popular iu every Htute. Tho Toledo Blfide is now installed in its new building, with a modern plant and equipment, and faciliii equal to any publication between Now Yurie and Chicago- Jt is lHU weekly newspaper edited expressly for every pule and territory. The News cf the World so arranged that busy people can more easily comprehend than by rending cumbersome columns of the dailies. All current topics made plain in ctich issuu'by special editorial mutter written from inception down to date.

The only paper published especially for people who do or do not tend daily newspapers, and yet thirst for plain fuels. Thai this kind a newspaper is popular is proven by the fact thai the Weekly Blade now lias over 170,000 Yearly MibRciiliciy, and is circulated in all pints of the U. S. In addition to the news, the Blnde, publishes nhnrt and serial stories anil many departments ol neuter suited to every number of the family. Due dollar a year.

Write br free specimen copy. Address THE BLADE, Toledo, Ohio. A Guaranteed dire For Plies. Itching, blind, Weeding or protruding Piles, Druggist refund money if IV. Ointment fallsVo cure any case, no matter of how ImW standing, in 0 to 14 days.

K.irst application gives ease and rest. 50u. If yotV druggist hasn't it sond 50.i in stamps, iVid it will he for warded post-paid by Purls Medicine Co. St. Louis, Mo.

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About The Red Cloud Chief Archive

Pages Available:
17,932
Years Available:
1873-1923